Evaluation and diagnosis of longitudinal melanonychia: A clinical review by a nail expert group
Longitudinal melanonychia (LM), a brown-black band on 1 or multiple nails, is commonly encountered in clinical practice. Benign LM may be due to exogenous (external, blood, bacterial, mycotic) or endogenous (melanin) pigment. Histopathologically, melanin-derived LM may result from overproduction of melanin by a normal number of melanocytes (melanocytic activation) due to physiologic, local, systemic, iatrogenic, syndromic, and drug-induced causes, or from benign (nail matrix nevus and lentigo) or malignant (nail unit melanoma [NUM]) melanocyte hyperplasia.